Yearly Standings and Average Home Attendance

1995: 9-9 (14,550)

The Mad Dogs were owned by the man who also owned
Federal Express and
coached by Pepper Rodgers, who had also coached at UCLA and the Memphis Showboats
of the USFL. While Rodgers was a likeable man, he often made uncomplimentary
remarks about the league.

The Mad Dogs tried to copy Baltimore's blueprint for success in the CFL by hiring Adam
Rita, a former CFL head coach as their offensive coordinator. They tried to sign CFL veteran QB
Matt Dunigan, who signed with Birmingham & instead signed Damon Allen as their QB. Other
notable players on offense included SB Eddie Brown and former NFL kicker Donald Igwebuike.
However, the MadDogs were not known for
their offense. The Mad Dogs did have a strong defense, with players like ends Tim Cofield and
Rodney Harding.

The Liberty Bowl was also not a CFL regulation-length
field, the end zones being only 15 yards long instead of 20.